Warning: session_start() [function.session-start]: open(/home/content/27/3330427/tmp/sess_aihs42fb7s514u4v6gn47rgil2, O_RDWR) failed: No such file or directory (2) in /home/content/27/3330427/html/crap_compost/wp-content/plugins/cleantalk-spam-protect/cleantalk.php on line 297

Warning: session_start() [function.session-start]: Cannot send session cookie - headers already sent by (output started at /home/content/27/3330427/html/crap_compost/wp-content/plugins/cleantalk-spam-protect/cleantalk.php:297) in /home/content/27/3330427/html/crap_compost/wp-content/plugins/cleantalk-spam-protect/cleantalk.php on line 297

Google Ads

Newsweek has gotten mighty clever jazzing up interest in their magazine this past few weeks — first by attacking Oprah while putting her popular face on their cover. And now they’ve snagged Stephen Colbert, the one and only fake right-wing egomaniac political pundit, as guest editor of this week’s issue on Iraq. Mr. Colbert holds a permanent place in the Compost Heap Hall of Fame, by using his immense heart and brain for good, not evil. He’s doing his part to draw attention to the fact that we are still in a war with Iraq. “I know what you’re thinking,” said Colbert. “Isn’t the war over?…We stopped seeing much coverage of the Iraq War back in September when the economy tanks, and I just figured the insurgents were wiped out because they were heavily invested in Lehman Brothers.”

Â

People are accusing Newsweek of doing this as a publicity stunt. Uh. Like that’s a bad thing? We know Cemetery Mary loves a great publicity stunt. Especially when it raises awareness about important topics of our time, and ties that in with a few laughts. GO NEWSWEEK. GO COLBERT. AND GOD BLESS OUR TROOPS.

Can’t say the issue attacking Oprah was worth the investment, but this one is.

Cemetery Mary lives in California and with all the hoopdeedoodle about our dire state budget, not to mention tragedy of Proposition 8 denying our gay brothers and sisters equal rights in the marriage department, sheâ€™s been busy turning crap into compost at every turn. Thatâ€™s why she was so thrilled to receive these nuggets of antipressing wisdom from ace writer and reporter Barbara Neal Varma (well known for having good Varma Karma).

Barbara is working on a story that explains how luck isnâ€™t necessary something magical and elusive. Thereâ€™s a science to it. Though her article isnâ€™t out until this fall, she passed on four tips from Dr. Richard Wiseman (The Luck Factor) who says lucky folks:

Maximize chance opportunities by having networks of friends and being relaxed enough to be open to different ways of achieving their goals

Are open to intuition and listen to their hunches

Expect to be lucky

Are able to see the positive side of bad fortune and so are better able to deal with it.

This recession is still getting heavy play in the media, but in addition to the terrifying doomsday stories that keep us all on heightened anxiety alert (â€œie: The gap between the rich and the poor will continue to widenâ€¦Itâ€™s one the worst recessions in our countryâ€™s historyâ€¦13 million people are facing unemploymentâ€¦more than 30 million people are relying on food stampsâ€¦. â€), a few stories about the upsides are starting to get some real attention. In fact the goddess of goodness herself (Oprah, who Cemetery Mary has long since forgiven for not taking her seat at my funeral) just did a whole show about folks whoâ€™ve dropped a few notches in social classes due to some severe financial set backs. And do you know what? Instead of turning into bitter nuts, they are surviving AND becoming, in the process, more compassionate, empathic humans.

Imagine that.

Turning crap into compost is what we do people.

It appears that formerly successful white collar workers once belonging to the upper-middle-class now stand in line at the unemployment office and realize for the first time that the unemployed are not a heap of unmotivated, uneducated or lazy losers. Because many freewheeling spenders have been forced to downsize, they have also learned that it is possible to be just as happy with less money. They have refocused their energy on family, friends and their lifeâ€™s passion.

And speaking of continuing to follow oneâ€™s heart, todayâ€™s SF Chronicle reprinted the journalist Barbara Ehrenreichâ€™s commencement address to UC Berkeley Journalism graduates in which she talks about how sheâ€™s had to recommit to her passion for telling the story that needs to be told despite the long hours and lousy pay. She informs the graduates that they are trying to carve out a career in the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. â€œYou are furthermore going to be trying to do so within what appears to be a dying industry.â€

Ehrenreich goes on to ask the students how they think it feels to be an autoworker right now? Or a laidoff paper mill worker, construction worker, or miner? â€œSo let me be the first to say this to you: Welcome to the American working class.â€

Ehrenreichâ€™s students and Oprahâ€™s guests all seem to embrace the economic challenges with a feisty compassion for focusing on whatâ€™s important. Though Ehrenreich was directing her comments to a group of journalists, her message is resonant with all workers of all social classes who are forced to accept the new reality of this job market.

â€œAs long as there is a story to be told, an injustice to be exposed, a mystery to be solved, we will find a way to do it. A recession wonâ€™t stop us. A dying industry wonâ€™t stop us. Even poverty wonâ€™t stop us because we are all on a mission here.â€

Thatâ€™s right, whatâ€™s the point of whining and worrying when there are so many missions to be accomplished?

Well, I’ll tell you. Having BOLDLY (after a few panic attacks) launched an online dating campaign for that next certain someone, I was doing the requisite online background check of a potential suitor and stumbled across some work he was doing for Habitat for Humanity. Honesty, Cemetery Mary has been so inundated with tragic stories of home foreclosures and tanking sales prices, she didn’t know that anything happy at all was occuring in the housing market. But how about this folks: Habitat built twenty homes in four days last month in the East Bay–making twenty families very happy. Please watch their spirited YouTube — all seven minutes — to remind yourself that things could not possibly be falling apart when people and communities come together in service. And though this potential love squeeze is not in this video, knowing he is building these home for people–what do you think ladies? Should I put the spell on him? Or is it too late–has all his do-gooding landed the spell on me? Something about all those tool belts and smiling faces has a effervescent effect on my hormone house. Click below to find out what they are up to. Really… Â Check it out!Â

AtÂ seminar last fall I heard Guy Kawasaki announce that we live in an era where â€œnobodies are the new somebodies.â€ With technology making expression easier and more accessible, we are seeing high school outcasts become Internet phenomenonâ€™s and global corporations chase YouTube stars for product endorsements. Nowhere is there a better example of a bunch of nobodyâ€™s kicking creative booty than the U.C. Merced students who snagged Michelle Obama as the 2009 commencement speaker for their first graduating class.

U.C. Merced?

I work at U.C. Irvine, my daughter goes to UCLA, and despite this close contact with the system, Iâ€™d never noticed a U.C. Merced.

Precisely. But now?

Front page news.

Despite only four years in existence, Â a group of imaginative students found a way to turn their campus–located in an area I’ve always found too hot to visit– into an overnight sensation. (Even though overnight sensations usually require years of hard work, creativity, Jupiter aligning with Mars, and Oprah. These guys did it without the latter.)

If you didnâ€™t read the paper today (and if you are sensitive to gloom I support your news detox)â€¦a group of U.C. Merced students launched a â€œDear Michelleâ€ letter writing campaign that charmed and moved Mrs. Obama enough for her to agree to make U.C. Merced the sweet spot for her first commencement address as first (African American) lady to the first class of undergraduate students to complete a full four-year course of study at the campus. The student-led initiative included a â€œWe Believeâ€ YouTube video, Â a Facebook campaign and more than 900 unique, hand written Valentine’s Day cards from the students, their friends, parents, aunts, uncles, grandmothers, and neighbors. The letters were delivered in one pretty heap to Michelleâ€™s White House office, and the requests ranged from the pragmaticÂ (â€œplease come, we need the publicityâ€) to the passionate ( YOU INSPIRE ME).

And hey, his wasnâ€™t the first time the kids in Merced managed to win over powerful decision makers. Apparently it was not long ago that every Merced school child wrote a letter to the members of the U.C. Board of Regents urging them to locate the campus in their community. Apparently there is big power in uniting small voices of activism and optimism in order to make things happen. The university has quickly grown to more than 2,700 students, with the most diverse student body in the UC system.Â More than half are first-generation college students, many from families whose incomes fall below the state poverty level.

I love when frontpage news leaves me choked up and inspired, instead of giving me anxiety and hives.

Lady Obama said, â€œThere are few things more rewarding than young people who recognize that they have the power to make their dreams come true.â€ And despite Cemetery Mary making a big scene burying a dead dream last winter, we all know it was only to make room for something better to come along (how do you spell R-E-S-U-R-R-E-C-T-I-O-N?)

But these guys resurrected the excitement of possibility and new life without having the funeral. They are the newest campus in, well, kind of crappiest locale. Folks usually just stop there to gas up on the way to Yosemite. Turns out I was wrong. There’s a lot more to that little town than meets the naked eye. Thanks for lifting the spirits Merced.

A few days earlier my friend Abeer said she was hanging out with some college buddies. One told a story about a wild dorm party and the third laughed saying, â€œThatâ€™s so funny. Whereâ€™d you go to college?â€

The others stared at her dumbfounded. â€œWith you,â€ they said.

OH. Yeah.

And that woman was only in her mid-thirties.

So whatâ€™s up with our brains these day? After doing some research by watching this crazy scary video,Iâ€™ve decided itâ€™s not memory loss at all. We are suffering from information overload combined with an insatiable addiction to get more data, more quickly, and more often. I’m always accessing email, voicemail, new music, google, newsfeeds, blogs, television, netflix, Facebook, Twitter…where does all this static go?

With the onslaught of data bombs heaved at us from every sector of technociety, some of the most basic brain information is getting vaporized.Â Did you know there are five times more words in the English language now than there were in Shakespereâ€™s time? Or that a weekâ€™s worth of content in The New York Times contains more information than a person was likely to come across in a lifetime in the 18th century? No wonder I find myself impatient when someone wants me to watch a Youtube that exceeds two minutes (like I keep expecting people to do with the links in this blog).

I donâ€™t have that kind of time when there is SO MUCH MORE INFORMATION I MUST OBTAIN NOW.

Random acts of kindness are useful. But extreme times call for extreme measures so today in The Compost Heap Hall of Fame Cemetery Mary celebrates those clever people who have stepped out on the limbs of insanity to perform acts that WAKE PEOPLE UP. We all need to be reminded that this life? She is ridiculousâ€¦.

On a visit to NYC last week, Cemetery Mary recently met her cool new literary agent. When I asked about some of said agents recent success stories, she handed me a review copy of a book called Rage Against the Meshugenah: Why It Takes Balls to Go Nuts, by Danny Evans, author also of the blog Dad Gone Mad.

But whatâ€™s Meshugenah, I asked? Itâ€™s the mad, crazy, and the mentally deranged.

Naturally, a gal who hangs around cemeteries, enjoys flamboyant funerals, and writes antidepressposts as a way of coping might just have a few issues that would make this book relevant. I opened it right after take-off on my flight home and was glued to the story until I reached the last page, just as the plane touched down in San Francisco.

Danny Evans writes about what its like for a man who presumably had it all to sink into an incapacitating clinical depression. And with a title like his, it will come as no surprise that the depressing depression story was punctuated with plenty of humor, as well as enough insight and hopefulness to warrant him a review in the Compost Heap Hall of Fame.

As a young man growing up in Simi Valley, Dannyâ€™s family wanted him to be a rabbi. Instead got a job writing ad copy, married his first love, Sharon, and figured when they had children theyâ€™d raise them â€œjewishly.â€Â Shortly after the birth of his first son, Danny was blindsided when he was suddenly laid-off and then four days later 9/11 occurred. With too much time on his hands, Danny became mesmerized by the media coverage of the attack and sank into complete despair for himself, his family, and humanity. (Like I said above, for those who are drawn to darkness, watching too much news is the quickest detour into full-scale mental illness.)

Making his way through many phases of recovery (beer, porn, unemployment, antidressants, talk-therapy, self-revelation, and eventually coaching a Little League baseball team), Danny came out the other side with his family intact.

Much of the story includes the amusing adventures of the writerâ€™s penis, whether it was for pleasure (solo sex, porn sex, partner sex), pain (vasectomy), or priapisms (side effects of antidepressants), but we all know how proud and protective the fellas can be about their equipment. It comes as no shock that that even through major depressions boys will be boys, and even more so, men will be boys. But sometimes, as is demonstrated in this tale of woe, when this disease is faced with courage and honesty, men can also be menâ€”which is where Danny Evans goes in the end, sucking it up to protect and provide for his â€œHot Wifeâ€ and their two not-always-perfect wee ones. The good news is that he does this while also learning to express the parts of his personality he had buried years earlier when he thought he had to live life only to please others (something we girls/women know something about too).

The only thing missing in this powerful crap-into-compost tale is more insight into how this manâ€™s sainted wife Sharon survived this period. Personally, I wouldâ€™ve loved to see an epilogue from the â€œHot Wife,â€ as she is affectionately referred. The narcissism of pain can drain the compassion out of the best of us, and even Danny wonders how he would have handled it if their roles were reversed. Would he have had the patience and stamina to stick by her? Sharon, what say you? I know love is a powerful healer, but on the days that love wasnâ€™t exactly accessible, what prevented you from drop kicking his sulking, beer drinking, porn watching, and unemployed ass out the door?

Hmmm. I think I smell a sequel.

The story is raw, funny, painful, insightful, honest, and a little meshuganah. That, and the fact it kept me absorbed on a six-hour flight, makes it something to recommend. Note: It doesnâ€™t hit the bookstores until August, but you can preorder it on Dannyâ€™s website, Dad Gone Mad.Â

Truthfully, Cemetery Mary is not that into raging, with or without drugs, but Iâ€™m always up for rebellion. So today I offer a rebellious game called â€œAttack the Medidiotsâ€ (thatâ€™s Media + Idiots if not obvious) and the object is to counteract the toxicity of our addictive daily news feeds, which seems intent on driving us all into deep depression, economically and otherwise, with nonstop need to terrify the general public.

I offer by way of example a recent Wall Street Journal story about Starbucks that I innocently read because one of my most beloved relatives spends her life doing PR for this gargantuan global coffee company.

Oh no! I thought, reading the article. Bad PR for Starbucks means a hard day for my cute relative, darnit! But then reading on, I got annoyed so annoyed…

The WSJ explained how coffee drink sales had dropped severely this quarter and how the company was going to launch a defensive advertising campaign to combat competitor insults, etc. etc….and because sales had dropped, and they were now making a quarterly net profit of only $25 million dollars â€¦

Hey waitaminuteâ€¦

TWENTY FIVE MILLION DOLLARS OF PROFIT IN THREE MONTHS? Total revenue is at $2.33 billion? Plus twenty more stores than last year? And this is worrisome why?

In my game, Attack the Medidiots, winners find ways to cut through the crap of the scary spin and find another truth that feels cheerful and motivating, instead of hopeless and terrifying

For example, Wall Street Journal, why not say:

STARBUCKS STAYS PROFITABLE IN GLOBAL RECESSION.

See how easy it is to play?

I MEAN REALLY, finding a downside to a story about profits during a recession is like grousing because last year we were running marathons when this year weâ€™re just cheerfully walking around the block, healthy, while so many others have cancer, diabetes, or the swine flu.Â

And speaking of The Flu Formerly Known as Swine, this H1N1 flu shows the Medidiots at their most ridiculous, no? News of its travel across globe is announced with the frequency of rush hour traffic reports, there are pictures of people in facemasks, and pigs may never recover from the hit on their reputations.

Then we learn that 36,000 a year die of just the regular flu?

Hereâ€™s the question of the day: Should this make us freak out LESS about The Flu Formerly Known as Swine, or do we need to freak out MORE about generic influenza?

Maybe itâ€™s all a clever marketing scheme concocted by the makers of Purcell? I have no relatives who do PR for that lucky company, so you tell me.

During a radio interview about the funeral I held for my dead dream of launching a best-selling writing career with my first novel, the host told me he found the book highly cinematic and wondered if Hollywood had called. “No,” I answered, “but if they want to…”and I offered up my phone number on the air.

Imagine my excitement when I arrived home to a blinking light on my voice mail.

Hollywood? No. It was another sort of producer, director type. James Anderson, a death row inmate at San Quentin, called (collect) to tell me he was inspired by my determination in plugging on with self-publishing and self-promotion even after receiving sixteen rejections from mainstream publishers. He said I had all the qualities and attributes he looked for in “clients.” Acknowledging that I might find that term laughable coming from a guy sitting on death row, he explained that he had a wide network of friends that he “represents” by promoting their art, projects, ideas, and causes. James then immediately followed up by sending me a package with a four page single-spaced cover letter telling me about the artwork, product ideas, research and relationships he’s created while serving (biding?) his time. Though it came as no surprise to me that James said he was innocent of the violent crime that had him locked up, that’s not why he contacted me. Mostly it was to interest me in his art, inventions, and ideas and to give me ideas to promote mine. He even offered to let me use one (or even more) of his paintings as cover art for my next book. And though not easily accessible on the web, the one link to his artwork shows work of great promise. Plus, his passion, purpose and swift follow-up skills demonstrated a level of zeal I’ve not encountered as standard customer service practices I’ve experienced as a “client” of others.

Axxeption

Innocent or not, James is now in my Hall of Fame for his willingness to bring life to his art and ideas, as well to offer folks like me the kind of pep-talks he gave me at the end of his letter, informing me that one of my “admirable qualities was that I was a “DOER and not a quitter.”

To this man who is locked up in prison fighting for his life I say, keep on painting, inventing, sharing your ideas, time and commitment with those who touch your imagination, and thanks so much for taking me on as a client.

If you want to write James Anderson, send snail mail to him at his office at P.O. Box C -11400:5EY39, San Quentin, CA, 94974.